Coffee heat rising

w00t! Times has PF frenzy!

OMG. This morning’s New York Times, ever in touch with the whims of the moment, has gone overboard in its coverage of personal finance and frugality. And as usual, they’re a day late and a dollar short (sorry, Times editors: but what can you do when you have to steer a 1,500-ton flagship?). 

To start with, over at Get Rich Slowly, Mrs. JD published a highly entertaining piece on the virtues (and drawbacks) of DIY. Hoot! She scooped the FRONT PAGE (no less) of the Times by a full day! Appearing in print a good 24 hours later, Times reporter Susan Saulny comes forward with some of the funniest DIY disasters on record…okay, okay! They’re not funny if they happen to you. But if they don’t…heeeeee!

The entire freaking Times Sunday Magazine is devoted to PF issues, right down to Randy Cohen’s column, “The Ethicist.” We were given a heads-up on this by Frugal Scholar, who, before the magazine hit the newsstands, got a conversation going, with a follow-up, on financial writer Edmund Andrews’s so-scary-I’m-hiding-under-the-bed article about his journey toward desperate indebtedness. The mag, which features a mildly annoying photo of Suze Orman on the cover and an eye-glazing profile inside, is quite the tour de force. A really creepy piece on credit card companies’ interest in the psychology of tu et moi (by Charles DuHigg) struck me as easier to read than David Leonhardt’s no doubt much more significant article on the economic relationship between China and the U.S. Overall, it’s good, very good.

But oh, my friends, and ah, my foes: bloggers got there first!

😀

w00t! Funny lives!

It was a rough passage, but thanks to Mrs. Micah, Funny about Money made it to BlueHost in one (very large!) piece. She and the Mr. did an incredible job on what turned into a very difficult project. Almost all the posts have now come across intact. Some of the formatting (such as colored fonts and diacriticals) had to be tossed overboard, but otherwise, the content by and large is back on terra firma.

Many, many kudos to Mrs. Micah, whose determination to make this work prevailed when I was ready to give up. Next time you need a blog consultant, Mrs. M is definitely the go-to person! 

♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥

Getting closer!

Wow! What an adventure this migration has been. I would not have had a snowball’s chance of moving Funny to BlueHost by myself. It’s been quite a challenge for Mrs. Micah, who’s an expert. Apparently the issue is that quite a lot of strange code lurks in the innards of Funny about Money, with many squirrelly results. Mr. Micah, himself a university-trained technoguru, was called in on the job, and together they’ve been wrestling with this thing for many more hours than any of us bargained on.

Funny was born on iWeb, Apple’s allegedly idiot-proof blogging platform. It’s easy to use, but also pretty limited in scope; after the MobileMe fiasco, I decided to move FaM to WordPress, which can be accessed from any platform and from any computer that’s online. 

Natch, WordPress will not import from iWeb. This meant I had to copy each post and page out of iWeb, store it in Word, and then import it into WordPress. One. at. a. time.

WordPress doesn’t like Word, which as you know is awash in squirrelly code. So instead of pasting directly into a WordPress post, you have to run the copy through a kind of “scrubber,” conveniently provided on the toolbar. I thought I’d done this for each and every entry. 

However, it was a mind-numbingly tedious chore, which I performed at night while parked in front of the television, itself a mind-numbing state. So it’s entirely possible that an article or two accidentally got slapped directly from Word into a post. We’re told this can create all sorts of havoc. But at WordPress.com, things seemed to work smoothly enough. 

The Micahs theorize that the Wordscrubber sometimes fails to remove all the offending code. That also could be an explanation. Or it may be that something came through from iWeb (which creates an impenetrable barrier between user and code for all but the most MacTechie). 

Whatever the cause, I’m beginning to wonder if the thing is corrupting as it goes. An hour ago Mrs. M celebrated success. When I looked at it, most of the site seemed OK, but then on second and third glance more and more posts proved to be truncated…at least one or two of which I’d swear were just fine the first time I saw them. 

There’s a Feedburner feed. I have yet to figure out how to make it readily available to you, but you can click on that link. At the moment the posts are out of order, but with any luck we’ll get that straightened out, too. And there’s you can sign up for an e-mail feed, which I haven’t experimented with yet. 

Mrs. Micah has staggered out of the wrestling ring. I also need to give up for the nonce: spent the better part of a week writing a proposal to save our office at the Great Desert University, bandying ideas back and forth with half a dozen colleagues. Finally sent it off to Her Deanship this afternoon. She hasn’t even bothered to respond… Experience suggests that the Wells of Silence effect is never good. Not that I seriously expected it would fly, anyway.

So, with everybody too exhausted to move, à demain.

Funny is on Twitter

apatosaurus33
Halcyon days

…sort of… Just signed up this morning, and now see the learning curve for this thing will be a bit steep for a survivor of the Cretaceous.

At any rate, I’m finally on Twitter, no doubt moments before another comet comes along to end the Twitter Age. Those comets: what a nuisance!

The username is FunnyAboutMoney. I have yet to figure out what the “@” function is about, but if it has significance, will let you know. Please sign up to “follow” FaM, and let me know how to find you on Twitter so I can sign up to follow you!
🙂

Image: Public domain; found at Wikipedia Commons

RSS feed changed to summary

If you’re reading Funny through an RSS feed, you’ll be seeing a summary instead of the former full post. This setting is recommended by WordPress, so I just discovered. You can click on “more” to see the entire text and graphics.

I have yet to figure out how one gets an RSS feed to a WordPress.com blog (apparently you can set one up through Google, but how???). From what I can tell, these freebie sites come with an RSS feed by default, unless you set up the site as private. WP’s proprietors, being very bright young things, assume as bright young things will that the rest of us are just as bright. Alas, we’re not. For the life of me, no matter how assiduously I search Support and Forums, I can not parse out how a reader subscribes to an RSS feed to one of these blogs, or whether (and how) you can see how many people have RSS feeds.

Mysterious. Possibly it’s just one of those mammalian things that’s beyond the Cretacean brain’s capacity to grasp.
apatosaurus33

View of the Good Old Days by?????via Wikipedia